The 'Slender Man' mythos : a structuralist analysis of an online mythology

The Slender Man first started on the Something Awful forum threads in 2009, where many users all jointly contributed to the creation of a tall monster who appears to be wearing a suit. He is known for making children disappear and causing violent deaths to the adults who seek to know more about him....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Asimos, Vivian Marie
Published: Durham University 2019
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.768392
Description
Summary:The Slender Man first started on the Something Awful forum threads in 2009, where many users all jointly contributed to the creation of a tall monster who appears to be wearing a suit. He is known for making children disappear and causing violent deaths to the adults who seek to know more about him. His creation was caused by mass communal storytelling, each singular narrative being created by different authors all inspired by their own view of the creature. Despite this more disjointed creation almost ten years ago, the Slender Man has retained an important place online, having spread from his forum thread to web videos, humorous memes, and even video games. This work seeks to answer the question about what this mythos is truly saying in its deeper levels. Structural anthropological mythic analysis, sometimes paired with ethnographic details, seeks to demonstrate how the Slender Man mythology is structured. Connected to this, we also seek to answer the question of what cultural group the Slender Man's mythology belongs to, leading to an important question on the existence of "digital culture". We find the narrative holds a triadic structure, in which the Slender Man does not necessarily have a place, but controls the structural flow. We also find there is little in the way of an existence of a full "digital culture", but rather that the online environment is comprised of communities.